131 A. 770 | Md. | 1926
Clarence D. Mobley died a resident of Frederick County on April 12th, 1925, intestate, and possessed of personal estate whose value is estimated to be about seven thousand dollars. He was unmarried, and his next of kin were his brother, William J. Mobley, a resident of Frederick County, and a half sister, Alice D. Mobley, who was an adjudged lunatic, and a nephew and a niece, Howard V. Mobley and Nina R. Hall, who were non-residents of the State of Maryland, being in Washington, D.C., and a nephew, E. Keefer Mobley, of Baltimore, and an infant great niece and two infant great nephews, whose three names do not appear in the record.
The nephew and niece, Howard V. Mobley and Nina R. Hall, first applied for letters of administration upon his estate, and the brother followed with a similar application, which was accompanied by a purporting power of attorney from the applicant. This power of attorney was undated and anticipated his appointment, since it was executed as administrator by the brother to his own daughter, Exie E. Yingling, whom he attempted to constitute his agent "with full powers to collect all debts due the said estate; pay all debts due by the said deceased, make all returns to the *404 Orphans' Court for Frederick County, settle accounts with said court; in short, to do and transact all such business as may be necessary to a full and complete administration of said deceased estate." The application of the nephew and niece was objected to by the brother on the grounds that they were non-residents of the State of Maryland and a degree further removed from the intestate than the brother in kinship. The nephew and niece, in turn, protested the appointment of the brother. They alleged that he was incapable of acting; and, in effect, had so admitted by the execution of the power of attorney, which was asserted to be equivalent either to a renunciation or a waiver of his right to administer. These petitions and objections came on for hearing, and testimony was taken before the Orphans' Court of Frederick County, and reduced to writing. The court held, upon the proof, that the petitioner, William J. Mobley, was competent and qualified; and by its order of June 1st, 1925, appointed him the administrator. From this order, Howard V. Mobley and Nina R. Hall, brother and sister, have appealed.
The intestate's next of kin in degree of relationship were the surviving brother and half-sister. As the half-sister had been declared a lunatic under an inquisition held before the death of the intestate and was thereafter kept in confinement by reason of her continuing insanity, she was unqualified. Richardson v.Smith,
The appellants as niece and nephew are two members of a class of four, who are one degree further removed from kinship with the intestate than is his brother, the appellee. The appellants were, therefore, not entitled to the grant of letters of administration under the circumstances of this record, unless the brother was incompetent under the law or had declined, expressly or impliedly, to administer. Code (1924), art. 93, sec. 22;Williams v. Addison,
The appellee did not formally renounce his right to administer, but his attempted nomination of an agent to perform the duties of his administratorship is affirmed by the appellants to have been either an implied renunciation or a waiver of his right to administer. There is no sufficient foundation for this contention. Apart from all other considerations, the appointment in writing of the daughter as appellee's agent, although undated, was executed and filed simultaneously with his sworn petition and application for the grant of letters of administration to him, and after the appellees had filed their petition and application with the Orphans' Court of Frederick County.
Instead of disclaiming any intention to administer, the petitioner was at once enforcing his superior right through the appropriate procedure, and resisting the appointment of the nephew and niece. He can not be said to have intended either to renounce or to waive what he was then avowedly and determinedly seeking. His action and the proceedings were not susceptible of the construction that he was renouncing any right. The agency, which is sought to be made equivalent to a renunciation or a waiver, was itself in terms explicitly dependent upon the grant of letters of administration to the appellee and pre-supposed the prior appointment of the appellee as administrator. The proposed delegation was an assertion of the principal's power arising through a grant to him of the right to administer, and from *406
its inherent nature such an act cannot be construed to be a renunciation or a waiver of the right to a status, which the donor was anticipating, but nevertheless in the course of asserting, when he executed the document in question. Brodie v.Mitchell,
In the prematurely executed power of attorney, the appellee was exercising the authority with which he believed he would have been clothed as the administrator of the intestate, and this was quite a different thing from an express renunciation of the right to be appointed administrator or from one implied from conduct, amounting to a waiver or estoppel, of the party entitled, as is illustrated by those cases relied upon by the appellants. Slayv. Beck,
It has long been recognized in this state that an executor or administrator may, within certain limitations, delegate his authority as a personal representative to an agent. He may, for instance, employ counsel to act in legal affairs and in collections (a); an overseer to finish the growing crops of the decedent (b); or an agent to rent the property of the estate (c), or to collect its claims, or to assist in other ministerial duties (d). In fact, the case of Eversfield's Executrix v.Eversfield's Representatives, 4 H. J. 12 (1815), is an illustration of settlements of accounts having been made for an executrix in the Orphans' Court of Prince George's County by her agent as a matter of course. And the preamble to chapter 131 of the Acts of 1823, conferring authority upon the orphans' court, "wherever they are satisfied that an agent has been employed in the administration of the estate of a deceased person by an executor or administrator or executrix or administratrix, to examine such agent on *407
oath of all proceedings which may have taken place relative to the administration of the estate of any deceased person in which such an agent may have been employed, in like manner, as they are now authorized by the act to which this is a supplement to examine executors or administrators," recited that the occasion for the enactment was the great frauds which had been practiced by the employment of such agents, "who are not compelled by law to make any return of their proceedings to the several orphans' courts in this state and cannot be examined by said courts, on oath, as to their proceedings." This statute is now codified as section 7 of article 93 of the Code (1924). (a) Ward v. Koenig,
The power of attorney in the instant case was inoperative because it was executed, delivered, and filed on April 25th, 1925, and letters of administration were not granted to the appellee until five weeks later. Ratrie v. Wheeler's Executor, 6 H. J. 94. But even if it had been executed after the appellee's selection and qualification as administrator, the instances last cited of the valid delegation of power by an executor or administrator illustrate the point that the nomination of an agent to act for an administrator in his representative capacity is in no sense a denial of the donor's desire and right to continue to act as an administrator of his decedent's estate, nor equivalent to his renunciation or waiver of his office. And should the grant of power be so comprehensive as to include non-delegable functions of an administrator, the validity of the document itself might be affected, but the donor's right to administer would not be lost. *408
2. The appellee is, therefore, entitled to administer, if he have the qualifications. Neither indebtedness to the intestate (a); nor separation, without divorce, of the spouses (b); nor withdrawal from the world into a religious order (c); nor inability to read or write (d); nor insolvency or non-residence (e); nor old age or bodily infirmities (f), are sufficient alone to disqualify. Bagby on Executors and Administrators, secs. 29, 30; Cook v. Carr,
The disqualifications of any one seeking to be appointed as administrator are specified by statute law. Code (1924), art. 93, secs. 17 and 53. The orphans' court must not grant letters of administration to any person, who, at the time of the application, is (a) under the age of eighteen years; (b) or of unsound mind, incapable according to law of making a contract; (c) or convicted of any crime rendering him infamous according to law; (d) or not a citizen of the United States. And the orphans' court has no power to declare a party, who is entitled to administer, to be of unsound mind, incapable of making a valid deed or contract, but the law exacts that this be first adjudicated under a writ de lunatico inquirendo issued by either the circuit court or orphans' court on the petition of any person interested. Code (1924), art. 93, sec. 57; Kearney v.Turner,
The paragraph quoted is at the end of a series of sections merely enumerating the classes in succession entitled and preferred in the grant of letters of administration. The word "incapable" found in this final section is not employed to add a fresh disqualification for those otherwise eligible to administer but is a reference to already existing disqualifications, which are created by sections 17 and 53 and which have universal application, whether the petitioner be a near or distant kinsman, a creditor or any other stranger to the blood. If the point made by the appellant be allowed, the application of the clause "ifthese be incapable" would be confined to husband, wife, child, grandchild, father, brother, sister and mother of the intestate, who constitute only some but not all of the whole class eligible for selection. This consideration alone indicates the incongruity involved in the position of the appellants and is sufficient to establish that the meaning ascribed by the appellants was not in the legislative language nor mind when it passed the great Act of 1798, chapter 101, containing the provisions now under discussion in substantially the same form in which they subsist in the Code. Acts of 1798, chapter 101, sub-ch. 4, secs. 4-5, sub-ch. 5, secs. 23, 7.
The word "incapable" in section 31 is, therefore, a descriptive term, and was used to avoid the repetition of the disqualifications, which are now specified in section 53 of article 93 of the Code, but which originally preceded section 31, as will appear from a reference to the Act of 1798, chap. 101, sub-chap. 4, sec. 1 (section 53), sub-chap. 5, sec. 23 (section 31). The matter was before the Court in the case of Kearney v.Turner (1868),
It will be noted that this Court treated the two exceptions as embodying the same legal question, although the first proffer of evidence related to the mental condition of the applicant, and the second to her physical capacity. As no one may be declared of unsound mind because of physical incapacity, and as the evidence offered under the second exception would have been admissible, if physical incapacity had been a disqualification under the statute, it is manifest that this Court did not consider physical incapacity a distinct ground to refuse letters of administration.
The case of Stouffer v. Stouffer,
Frequently physical infirmity results in, or is associated with, mental incapacity, but so long as mental capacity remains sufficient for the execution of a valid deed or contract, a party may successfully assert his right to the grant of letters of administration, supra.
3. We have reviewed the facts on this record which were before the orphans' court, and we do not differ from their conclusion.
Although the appointee was paralyzed so as to deprive him of the use of his right side, and had been in bed for some months before his appointment, except when daily taken from the bed so as to have it made up, yet the proof is he could have been taken to Frederick and carried before the orphans' court. He could read and, before his paralysis, could write. All agree that his mind was clear and his mental processes remained intelligent. He was an owner of property and had a complete grasp of the nature and amount of his dead brother's estate, which was principally personalty in the form of liquid assets. There was a deposit of $5,500 in bank; a note of $900 which the debtors were ready to pay; some small amounts payable as death benefits by several fraternal associations; and one or two judgments which the testimony indicated are probably barred by limitations. Such assets entailed no onerous duties upon an administrator. If the brother was willing to assume whatever physical risks were incident to the administration, the orphans' court had no duty nor power to deny him his legal rights because the orphans' court may not have thought he was acting prudently.
If, after his appointment, the administrator should fail in *412 the performance of his duty as administrator, the orphans' court has ample power to remove him, and his bond gives full protection to the distributees and all other parties in interest.
Order affirmed, with costs to the appellee.